There was a time, not long ago, when youngsters idolised and
tried to emulate Imran Khan and Wasim Akram, or more recently Shoaib
Akhtar and Shahid Afridi, as they honed their cricketing skills playing
on the streets.
It seems, however, that things have changed drastically, for the
worse, because teenage cricket lovers are now following in the footsteps
of tainted fast-bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir, the disgraced
duo currently serving a ban from all types of cricket for their
involvement in the spot-fixing saga.
Fixing matches, or at least placing bets on them as a series of
festival tournaments take place across the country, is not new but the
act being carried out on the streets has become a favourite pastime for
many. While betting – placing money on their predicted winner – is
common, cash for underperformance has now hit the streets.
How it is being done
Numair Ali, a fan and a player, has not missed a single night without
cricket action this Ramazan while finding other ways to enjoy the
sport.
“We’re having a lot of fun by betting on each delivery,” Numair told
The Express Tribune. “One of my senior teammates used to bet on
different deliveries by taking the bowler into confidence and I also
enjoyed it on my first attempt.
“Normally, we ask the bowler to bowl a loose delivery and place money
on that ball being hit for a four or a six. We also bet on a wide or a
no-ball but that is quite rare. Betting on a run-out – where a player
traps his partner – is another popular part of this practice.”
Numair, 18, did make it clear that it was not the money that forced him to take up this hobby.
“Such bets don’t involve huge amounts. In our group, we don’t bet
more than a thousand rupees and sometimes, it’s just a bottle of drink
that is used as bets. We only do it for fun and it is gaining
popularity.”
Numair agreed that the involvement of former captain Salman Butt,
Asif and Amir played a huge role in popularising spot-fixing and getting
the youth involved in it, even if it’s for recreational purpose.
“The saga was when we got introduced to the word spot-fixing and only came to know much about it after the trio was caught.”
Discouragement needed straight away
Meanwhile, the President of Karachi City Cricket Association (KCCA)
Sirajul Islam Bokhari believed that although such offences were unlikely
to have any impact at a higher level, they still needed to be
condemned.
“I have yet to see it happen at club or domestic level,” he said.
“But if it’s being committed on the streets, it should be discouraged
because youngsters should be raised with a clean frame of mind.”
The writer is a sports reporter at The Express Tribune.
News By : Express Tribune
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